HI Mailbag: 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive

There is a large white frame house on Kessler Boulevard, a couple of blocks east of the Monon Trail, that I have admired for years. It appears to be much older than the homes around it, as well as on a bigger lot. Would you have any information on its history? ~ Lois H., Indianapolis

HI’s Answer:

The address of the house to which you refer is 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive. At approximately 130 years of age and with more than 4,100 square feet on nearly two acres of land, it is definitely older and larger than most of the properties around it.

The one-of-a-kind residence at 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive has been a Broad Ripple area landmark since the 1880s ( 2016 photo by Sharon Butsch Freeland )

The land on which the home was built was originally part of a larger tract that was purchased from the United States of America on July 28, 1821, by the Reverend William Rector (1792-1873) and his wife Elizabeth Smith Rector (1795-1851). In 1826, the Rectors sold their 75 acres to Elijah Dawson (1781-1858) and his wife, Mary Ann Hardin Dawson (1785-1865). It remained in the Dawson family for the rest of the 19th Century.

Born in Virginia, the Dawsons came to Indiana via Kentucky, more than a decade before Indiana became a state in 1816. The first five of the Dawsons’ ten children were born in Dearborn County. The remaining five children were born in Marion County, after Elijah and Mary Dawson moved to the center of the state. Over the next few decades, Elijah and Mary acquired several large parcels of land in Washington Township. As their sons and daughters grew to adulthood, the parents gifted each child with some of the land they had acquired.

The youngest of the ten Dawson children was Jackson Dawson (1828-1892). When Jackson turned 18 years of age in 1846, his parents deeded the 75-acre property to him. The undeveloped land was a short distance south and east of the Town of Broad Ripple. In 1850, Jackson married Lucinda Pursel Johnson (1832-1892). She was the daughter of John Johnson (1798-1854) and Sarah Pursel Johnson (1802-1848). The Johnsons, Pursels, and Dawsons are among the oldest and most prominent families of Washington Township. They, their in-laws, and their descendants, developed many areas in the vicinity of Broad Ripple, Glendale, Allisonville, Nora, Ravenswood, and Keystone at the Crossing.

1855 Condit, Wright, & Hayden map shows J. Dawson as owner of 75 acres in Washington Township, south of Broad Ripple (courtesy of the Library of Congress) CLICK TO ENLARGE

Since there were no directories for rural areas in the 1800s, as there were for Indianapolis and other cities, the exact physical location of Jackson and Lucinda Dawson’s home was not ever listed in that type of printed resource. Census records clearly placed them in Washington Township in 1860, 1870, and 1880, but did not indicate a street address. The 1890 Census was lost in a fire at the National Archives, so it is not available as a reference. The first Census enumeration to provide recognizable street names and house numbers for areas outside the city limits was the 1900 Census. Unfortunately, both Jackson and Lucinda died in 1892, so they never appeared on a census that gave an address that might be deciphered today.

However, an 1889 Atlas of Washington Township shows a small black square on Jackson Dawson’s land that’s labeled “Res.” In the map’s legend, it indicated that this mark represented a dwelling. As the icon was in the exact location of the subject property, it can be assumed with relative certainty that the residence that survives today was erected no later than 1889. It’s possible that it was built earlier than 1889.

1889 Atlas of Washington Township showed the rectangular icon of a residence in the same spot as the present home stands (map courtesy Indiana State Library) CLICK TO ENLARGE

Lucinda Dawson died on March 9, 1892, of heart disease. Jackson died on July 5, 1892, possibly from typhoid fever. Jackson and Lucinda Dawson had six children, three of whom preceded the parents in death. The three surviving sons, Marcellus, Elmer, and Ulysses, plus young George Kirkpatrick, a grandson born to the Dawsons’ deceased daughter, Cenora Dawson Kirkpatrick (1854-1884), became the heirs to their property.

March 10, 1892 Indianapolis News clipping announcing the death of Lucinda Johnson Dawson

July 5, 1892 Indianapolis News clipping announcing the death of Jackson Dawson

A second notice of Jackson Dawson’s death appeared in The Indianapolis News on July 5, 1892

Years before his death, Jackson Dawson had attempted to make arrangements for dividing the land equitably among his heirs. However, he died intestate, so those plans were called into question. Some documents were not clear. Other documents were contested as fraudulent. Still other agreements were verbal and not recorded. There were also leases with the Ohio Oil Company and the Indiana Pipe Line that had to be resolved. In addition to the 75-acre tract south of what is now Kessler Boulevard, Jackson also owned a tract of land north of what is now Kessler Boulevard, a half-mile east of the home discussed here.

Elmer Dawson (1863-1964), the second-to-the-youngest of Jackson and Lucinda’s children, was named administrator of Jackson’s estate. Elmer had already built a home for his family at 1602 Kessler Boulevard on the land that his father had promised to him back in 1884. It was years before Jackson Dawson’s estate was finally settled.

On August 17, 1907, 25 acres of Jackson Dawson’s original 75 acres were deeded to Thaddeus R. Baker (1873-1956), who then deeded them to his sister, Florence Baker Holliday (1870-1947) just four days later. Thaddeus and Florence were the children of Indiana Governor Conrad Baker (1817-1885). Florence was the wife of Jacquelin Smith Holliday (1867-1944), Chairman of the Board of W. J. Holliday & Company, a wholesale steel and iron firm founded in 1856 by his father, William Jacquelin Holliday (1829-1918).

On May 3, 1910, Florence Holliday sold the subject residence and 10 acres immediately surrounding it to Walter Jerome Goodall (1860-1934), who was secretary of W. J. Holliday & Company. Florence retained the land alongside the Monon Railroad, which she later signed over to her son, Frederick T. Holliday (1897-1951). Most of the latter parcel of land later became the Canterbury neighborhood.

May 3, 1910 Indianapolis Star listed the sale to Walter J. Goodall

Walter Goodall and his wife, Lulu Osterman Goodall, resided at 2107 North Pennsylvania Street at the time they purchased the former Dawson property. Their two-story frame home in the Herron-Morton Place Historic District, built around 1895, is still standing today.

The Goodalls purchased the rural Washington Township property as a country retreat to which they could escape from the noise, dirt, and bustle of the city. In those days, six miles from the center of town was out in the country. The Goodalls only child, daughter Eleanor Josephine, married Ralph Clemens Vonnegut (1896-1985) in 1922. Ralph was vice-president and treasurer of the Vonnegut Hardware Co. and a first cousin of Kurt Vonnegut Sr., the author’s father. Living relatives of the Goodalls recall their elders having many fond memories of time spent at the family’s summer home.

The Abstract of Title prepared for Walter J. Goodall and passed on to Albert Worm in 1915 is still in existence today (document courtesy of Alice Ashby Roettger)

Street view of the home at 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive taken from the northwest and looking to the southeast (2016 photo by Sharon Butsch Freeland)

1913 item in the Indianapolis Star

In 1913, the Goodalls purchased a lot at 4156 Washington Boulevard. In 1914, they began construction of a much larger home than their Herron-Morton Place abode. The new Goodall residence was in the area that organized as the Meridian-Kessler Neighborhood in 1965. In 2008, a portion of the MKNA area immediately around the home was designated the Washington Park Historic District. The home was a 5-bedroom Prairie Style brick home with a ballroom on the third floor and servants quarters, situated on a 300′ deep lot.

In 1951, 4156 Washington Boulevard mysteriously disappeared from city directories and area maps. Some creative sleuthing resulted in the discovery that 4156 Washington Boulevard had been renumbered to 4106. The new owners of the Goodall residence in 1950 were Sampson B. Moxley (1912-1988) and Lucina Ball Moxley, who chose a different address for the property using numerology.

The Goodalls purchased a building lot in the 4100 block of Washington Boulevard

May 9, 1914 clipping from the Indianapolis News

On December 18, 1915, the Goodalls gave up their country getaway and sold it to abattoir Albert R. Worm (1870-1944) and his wife (“et ux”). More information about Albert Worm, his businesses, and the home can be found in a 2015 Historic Indianapolis article by Libby Cierzniak here.

1915 Indianapolis News clipping reported the sale to Worm and wife

A 1931 newspaper article by Agnes McCulloch Hanna mentioned two Dawson properties that were still standing at that time. The Dawson home that was on East 62nd Street / Broad Ripple Avenue, west of Keystone Avenue, was demolished in the late 1950s. A Kroger Supermarket, Haag Drugs, and Huddle Restaurant were built on that corner around 1960. In more recent years, a Marsh Supermarket was built on that site. The other Dawson home mentioned in the 1931 article was 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive.

Two years after his wife’s death, Albert Worm placed a personal notice in the newspaper.

On April 10, 1937, Albert Worm married Anna Kupfersberger. Anna had been the Worms’ live-in housekeeper since the early 1920s. The Worms and Kupfersbergers, all of whom were German immigrants, were members of Zion Evangelical United Church of Christ at North and New Jersey Streets.

The 1941 Baist Atlas showed the 10 acres that Albert Worm bought from Walter Goodall, as well as the land west of it and south of it that had once been part of the Dawson farm.

In 1943, the Worms divided their 10 acres into 31 residential building lots, which they named Oakridge Addition. Seven of the lots — Lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 28, 29, and 30 — are part of the property at 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive. The remaining lots had homes built on them in the 1940s and 1950s.

1949 ad for new Oakridge Addition, of which 1215 Kessler Boulevard is now a part

In 1944, Albert Worm passed away. He was buried at Crown Hill Cemetery alongside his first wife, Margarethe. His second wife, Anna Kupfersberger Worm, was his only survivor.

1944 obituary for Albert Worm appeared in the Indianapolis Star

Side view of the home at 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive, taken from the southeast and looking towards the northeast (2016 photo by Sharon Butsch Freeland)

Since the 1960 death of Albert Worm’s second wife, Anna, the home at 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive has been passed on to later generations of Anna’s family.

Albert Worm’s second wife passed away April 2, 1960

June 28, 1973, obit of William Hubert, brother-in-law of Alfred Worm’s second wife

Jannuary 5, 1981 obituary of Anna Kupfersberger Worm’s niece, Elsa

April 12, 2013 obituary of Elsa M. Hubert (indystar.com)

Upon the death of Elsa M. Hubert in 2013, the property passed to her nephew. Out of respect for his privacy, I will not publish his name here. Although there were attempts to sell the landmark home in 2015, it would appear from public records that the nephew is still in title to the property.

View of 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive from the east side and looking due west (2016 photo by Sharon Butsch Freeland)

About The Author

Sharon Butsch Freeland is a freelance researcher, writer, proofreader, and editor. She's a proud alumna of Shortridge High School and MacMurray College and over the years has also taken courses at Herron School of Art and Design, Indiana University, University of Colorado, Colorado Academy of Art, and the Indianapolis Art Center. She's been the executive director of a nonprofit association, a newspaper columnist, a residential real estate broker, and a political campaign staff member. Fascinated by Indianapolis history from an early age, Sharon's passion for bygone eras became even more compelling when she discovered that her ancestors had settled in Indiana in 1828. Since learning that she's a seventh generation Hoosier, many details about both the State of Indiana and the City of Indianapolis have taken on new meaning for her. Sharon enjoys helping others get excited about the history of Indianapolis, as well as the histories of their own families.

52 Comments

Joyce Bradley
on January 12, 2016 at 1:56 pm

Thank you for this article. I found it very interesting. As a history buff and amateur genealogist, I enjoyed following along the family lines of these families and this house. I used to pass this house for years,,,but really never noticed it.
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I enjoyed seeing names of these people who helped grow and shape Indianapolis. Very interesting!

Now that’s what I call history! What a wonderful article and fascinating tale of the area. I’ve seen this beautiful home since the 70s, and am thrilled to learn so much about it. I hope one day it is on one of the Home Tours.

Thanks, George,
When I was Executive Director of the Broad Ripple Village Association, we attempted to get 1215 Kessler Boulevard on our annual Broad Ripple Historic Home Tour. Elsa Hubert always politely declined.
Sharon

Steve,
I wondered the same thing. My mother went to DePauw (Class of 1942), so of course I knew about the Rector Scholarship. I did a little searching for information on Reverend Rector, and it looks as if he wound up in Iowa after leaving Indiana. Since he was a Methodist minister, and since the name Rector is not that common, I would bet there is a connection somewhere between William Rector and Edward Rector. I’ll let you know if I find anything to support that.
Sharon

As a kid, I remembered being told that this home (or perhaps another older home nearby) had been part of the Underground Railroad. Not sure how well that story fits into the timeline of the home if it wasn’t built until 1880. Any ideas?

Julie,
I don’t pretend to be very knowledgeable about the Underground Railroad, but it would seem to me that it would have ceased its operations when the Union Army won the Civil War. There would have been no need to hide slaves, once slavery was abolished. The two large homes on large lots on Kessler Boulevard between the Monon Trail and Keystone Avenue are this one at 1215 and a brick home at 1315. The subject home was built in the 1880s, and the other home was built about 1906. I think people who have always wondered about these two landmarks may just have active imaginations.
Sharon

I loved learning more about the history of that house. One thing left out, however, is that the United States originally acquired the land from the Miami Nation, who ceded it to them in the Treaty of St. Mary’s in 1818. I am a citizen of the Miami Nation, and my ancestor Mihtohseenia was one of the several leaders who signed that treaty.

Scott,
Thank you for that correction. You are absolutely right. Historians tend to start their discussion of a property at the point a pioneer bought the raw land from the federal government, which does not begin to tell the whole story.
Sharon

Sharon – First, thanks for this site! I didn’t realize you did this, but I’m so glad you do, and i’ll be checking back often. Second, I’m sure you connected that Walt Vonnegut, from Tab, was also a cousin of Kurt. His daughter is married to one of the McDonald boys. I wonder if any memories were passed down on that side of the family. Thanks again – great research and article!

Hi, Mike,
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Thanks for leaving a comment. I’m glad you enjoyed the article.
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Yes, I am aware of Walter Vonnegut’s connection to his more famous cousin. Walt was actually the grandson of the people who owned 1215 Kessler Boulevard East Drive from 1910 to 1915, that is, Walter and Lulu Goodall. I believe Walt was named for his grandfather. Also, Walt’s middle name was Goodall, his mother Eleanor’s maiden name. I did get to speak with Nonie Vonnegut-Gabovitch and Richard Vonnegut about their ancestors’ summer home prior to writing the article. They are our contemporaries, so they weren’t alive when the Goodalls owned the property, but they grew up hearing stories about it.
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I have written more than 90 articles for Historic Indianapolis. I’m sure there are a number of subjects that would interest you (like the one I did on Tab’s Recreation Department). If you want to see a list of the topics, here is a link to all of the “HI Mailbag” pieces I’ve done: http://historicindianapolis.com/?s=%22HI+Mailbag%3A%22+.
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Best wishes to you and your family for a great year.
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Sharon

My parents built a home at 5815 Norwaldo Av in 1941, not very far east of this home. I was six years old. I have gone by this house thousands of times. I passed this Kessler house every time I went to BRHS, Butler U, and going to work in downtown Indy. I now live in Moab, UT. If you ever get to Moab, please call me. I will give you files that will keep you busy for a long time.

My husband and I have always wondered about the Kessler Boulevard house. We have lived in the Goodalls’ Washington Boulevard house for many years and did not know of the connection. The article actually provided us with more history of our house than we had previously. Thanks for your research and writing. It was fascinating.

Nancy,
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Thank you for posting a comment. I was really pleased to figure out which home in the 4100 block of Washington Boulevard was the Goodalls’. I had been scratching my head for a couple of days, since all of the records on the Goodalls’ home from 1913 to 1951 had the address of 4056 Washington Boulevard. I was beginning to think that the house had been demolished, and that neighbors on either side had taken some of the land to widen their own lots. Because the next even number south of 4056 in later directories was 4016, that number seemed too much lower than 4056 to be a plausible change in numbering. I began scouring the 2012 Historic Meridian Park book and finally found the answer. In the (rather small!) paragraph about 4016 Washington Boulevard, I found the answer. Do you have any notion of why the address was changed?
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Sharon

Nancy,
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If someone else asked you yesterday, that may have been the result of my asking questions. I was a real estate broker for many years, and I still have a lot of friends in the business. I reached out to some of them for help, when I couldn’t figure out what became of 4056 Washington Boulevard.
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Since I was up against a deadline, I had to let the unanswered question go. In reflecting on it since the piece was published, it occurred to me that the owners at the time of the address change would probably have an idea. The new owners in 1950 were Sampson B. and Lucina (Ball) Moxley. Sam was owner and president of the Haag Drug Co. He passed away a number of years ago.
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Lucina was the daughter of William H. Ball of the Muncie glass jar company, and the last I knew, Lucina was still living. I would guess she is about 97 years old now. Maybe Lucina can shed some light on this puzzle? Or one of her daughters could? I will try to locate her.
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Sharon

Nancy,
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Mystery solved! I spoke with Lucina Ball Moxley this morning. She told me that she and her husband, Sampson B. Moxley (1912-1988), were responsible for the change in the address. Their decision to change the house’s original number was based on numerology. She did not elaborate as to which method of numerology they used to select 4106 or why that number was significant to them.
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Sharon

Although there were attempts to sell the landmark home in 2015, it would appear from public records that the nephew is still in title to the property.

For clarity. There were no “attempts”. There was one attempt and it sold. At slightly below asking.

Roy W. Schroeder

Wendy Adams
on February 24, 2016 at 12:03 pm

Would you happen to know the name of the architect who designed the Goodalls’ Washington Blvd. house? I’ve heard that it was possibly someone named Sanford White, but I can’t find anything on anyone named “Sanford White.”

Wendy,
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Interesting question. I do not know who the architect was for 4156 Washington Boulevard. I just now searched the 1913 and 1914 Indianapolis city directories for the name, Sanford White. There was no one by that name listed. I also searched those same directories for their lists of architects. There was no one by that name listed there, either. I will try some other searches and let you know if I find anything.
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Sharon

There was a famous architect named Stanford White, who was shot to death in 1906 by a man named Harry K. Thaw because White had been having an affair with Thaw’s wife, Evelyn Nesbit, also known as “The Girl on the Red Velvet Swing.” It was a very famous murder case.

I have no idea whether Stanford White ever designed any buildings in Indianapolis.

If Stanford White died in 1906, then he could not have been the architect for the Goodalls’ residence. The Goodalls bought the lot at 4156 Washington Boulevard in 1913. Construction on the home began in 1914. The house was completed by 1915. The Goodalls were in the society pages of the newspapers, entertaining in their new home in 1916.
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Since Walter Goodall was partners in a company with members of the Holliday family, and since Walter and Lulu Goodall’s daughter, Eleanor, married a Vonnegut, my guess is that the architect for the Goodalls’ home was someone in one of those circles of friends or relatives.
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Sharon

Sharon Butsch Freeland
on February 24, 2016 at 9:39 pm

I’ve just done a search of newspapers from 1890 to 1910, and I could find no mention of Stanford White ever being in Indianapolis. I did, of course, find lots of articles on his 1906 murder. What a piece of work Harry Kendall Thaw was.

Sam Jacobs
on January 15, 2016 at 5:04 pm

Hi Sharon:
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A fascinating article. I grew up in the 1950s not too far from there on Primrose near Broad Ripple Park. I don’t remember that house at all, but I was always curious about another much more modest old house at 1501 E. Kessler Blvd. where they sold plants in the summer. It appeared to be much older than any other house in the neighborhood, and I was wondering whether there might be an interesting story behind it also.
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I just looked it up and saw that it was built in 1890. Our former house and the others around it weren’t built until 1927.
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Also one of your other readers was asking about the Underground Railroad. I remember that when I was in high school, I knew a girl who lived in a house on the southeast corner of 86th Street and Westfield Boulevard (right near North Central High School) that she said had once been a stop on the Underground Railroad. I know that house is long gone, but it could be the subject of a future article.

Hi, Ginny,
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Thank you for posting a comment. Yes, it’s been a while since we last saw one another, although I did see photos of you at your NCHS reunion last summer on Fred Jones’ Facebook page. Great cheerleading!
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Despite exhaustive research on the history of the Kessler Boulevard property and its past owners (only about half of which made it into the article), I have not been inside the home. When I was Executive Director of the Broad Ripple Village Association (2006-2012), we contacted Elsa Hubert several times about having it on the Broad Ripple Historic Home Tour, but she always declined.
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Since I’ve never been inside, I was not aware that it has only one bathroom. You must have learned that detail when it was for sale last year.
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I hope life is treating you well. Maybe we could get together some time?
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Sharon

What fun to read that article! Our first home when we married was at 1607 Kessler. That home itself was quite a bit older than its surrounding neighbors. We bought it from the estate of the three sisters who built it after WWI, and lived there until they died in the 80’s. We loved that we were in a little bit of history, and reading your article shed so much more light on the many names still familiar to those of us who have lived in the Broad Ripple area all our lives. Thanks for all your hard work on this.

Sharon, I was most impressed with the comprehensive overview and research done for this article. I found it extremely interesting. Thanks for sharing a part of Indianapolis history with which I was unaware (out of the tons I don’t know). Thanks for your diligent work.

Glad you enjoyed it, Mary. I find the many interconnections among people, their relatives, their homes, their friends, and the events that occurred during their lifetimes to be quite fascinating. Let me know if/when you visit Indy. We missed you at our (fabulous, in my humble opinion) class reunion last summer.

Sharon,
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The house was up for sale at the time of the Broad Ripple Home Tour. It was open for viewing that day, so I went through it. The house is still beautiful but needs updating, especially the kitchen. The main entry and staircase are still beautiful to this day, with a very interesting stained glass artwork at the top. There are two or three bathrooms that look as if they have been recently added.

Thanks for your report, Shirley. A comment from an earlier reader indicated that there was only one bath in the house. Sounds like the seller realized that was a stumbling block and remedied it.
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Look on the bright side. It may have had NO baths when it was built. 🙂

Thanks for leaving a comment, Greg.
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A reader commented earlier on there being only one bath in the house. She didn’t elaborate as to whether she read that somewhere or saw it herself, in person. Another reader commented on Facebook that she had toured the house when it was on the market last fall, and there were three baths, two of which looked pretty recent.
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While the property cards are a guide, they are not always accurate. Or maybe they were accurate at one time, but haven’t been updated. Since this property has been in the same family for more than a century (1915 to present), its record probably hasn’t received the same attention that a home that’s changed hands has. A home that has sold has a better paper trail, plus each time it was on the market, there was an opportunity to update its information.
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Regarding the year of construction, I conceded in the article that the home could have been built prior to 1889, but I could find no document that stated that fact. All I could confirm is that it existed by the time of its appearance on the 1889 map.

Always impressed by your research. My only minor quibble—must be a typo on the date Albert Worm married for the second time. The date given is 1947–since he died in 1944, I wonder if that second marriage took place in 1937.
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Re the Underground Railroad, there are many supposed sites, but relatively few that can be documented in any way. Obviously, no post-Civil War house could have been involved. What to do with run-away slaves became a problem early in the war for Union officers, as slaves sought shelter behind Union lines. Union General Benjamin Butler, who occupied New Orleans in May of 1862, declared them contraband of war, and refused to return them to their owners. Many other officers followed suit. As I understand it, this idea essentially became law under the Second Confiscation Act, passed in Aug of 1862.

The expert on this topic is Jeannie Regan-Dinius of the Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology (Department of Natural Resources), who has been studying it for several years now. I saw her give a presentation at the Indiana State Fair last fall and was very impressed. She is evidently doing a program on “the Underground Railroad in Indiana” in several locations in the upcoming weeks—see the list of “Upcoming Events” at the DHPA website here– http://www.in.gov/dnr/historic/

Thank you, Alan,
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You are absolutely right about the date. Albert Worm’s marriage to Anna Kupfersberger was on April 10, 1937. I can’t believe I didn’t catch that when I proofed it.
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Thanks also for the heads up about Jeannie Regan-Dinius. I will try to catch one of her programs in coming weeks.
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Sharon

Sharon, Your articles are all very fascinating. My Family has been in Indianapolis since the early 1900’s, with the oldest residence still standing on East street in the Lockerbie area. I attempt research now and then, but have yet to get it all organized. Again, thank you for your articles.

Thank you, Scott.
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I appreciate your taking the time to write, especially since your comments were positive ones. 🙂
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My family has been in Indianapolis since 1840, which I didn’t learn until I was in my mid-40s. Now I’m hooked on Indianapolis history!
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Sharon

Exceptional post. Great research.
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In the late 1960’s, I worked as the mail boy at Liberty Mutual Insurance Company located at 3333 N. Meridian St. There was a very sweet and very pretty young clerk working there named Jacqueline “Jackie” Prange. I once gave her a ride home to – 1215 Kessler Blvd. She lived there with her family.
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I passed the house frequently through the years and remember how beautiful it looked with the fall colors. Seems like they used to do a big Halloween pumpkin display on the front steps.

Do you know if the Holliday property (I believe the children of Frederick settled in Zionsville – at Holliday Farm) is the same family as the family who dontated Holliday Park? (Both it appears were owned by John Hollidays but were different people) — wondering if any relation. I always thought they were separate but if the Zionsville Holliday Farm had roots in Meridian Kessler perhaps they are related afterall…

It also looks like the IBJ should be a HI supporter since the bulk of his article is lifted from this article. Sharon should have gotten credit in that article as well. I heard that this article helped persuade the buyer to purchase the house.

In the information provided about the Worms’ you said they were long time members of the Zion Evangelical United Church of Christ. Was that not the Zion Evangelical and Reform Church during that time becoming the United Church of Christ around 1952 or so? Very interesting information. Passed by that house so many times through the years and wondered about its past. Thank you for such an inclusive article.